Chap.

1 Miltiad|  the good fortune of their adversaries, did not venture to resist,
2  Lysand|    into the power of their adversaries; in consequence of which
3   Datam|   when he had confined his adversaries in some defile, an advantage
4  Epamin| denied nothing of what his adversaries laid to his charge, and
5   Pelop|  upon the faction of their adversaries than upon the Spartans,
6  Agesil| number, if the mind of his adversaries had been but right, the
7   Eumen|  him alone to his European adversaries. 195 Perdiccas himself had
8   Eumen| the winter-quarters of his adversaries, of which the shorter lay
9   Eumen| that he might surprise his adversaries unawares. To effect his
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